views:

57

answers:

3

I have the following:

  <td>
    some text
    <div>a div</div>
  </td>

I'd like to make the entire td a hyperlink. I'd prefer without javascript. Is this possible?

+7  A: 

I'd like to make the entire td a hyperlink. I'd prefer without javascript. Is this possible?

That's not possible without javascript. Also, that won't be semantic markup. You should use link instead otherwise it is a matter of attaching onclick handler to <td> to redirect to some other page.

Sarfraz
Actually, it is possible without javascript. See other answers in this thread.
Abel
@Abel: It is a camouflage :) But markup isn't worth of it :)
Sarfraz
+2  A: 

I would recommend using an actual anchor element, and set it as block.

<div class="divBox">
    <a href="#">Link</a>
</div>

.divBox
{
    width: 300px;
    height: 100px;
}
.divBox a
{
    width: 100%;
    height: 100%;
    display: block;
}

This will set the anchor to the same dimensions of the parent div.

Dustin Laine
+1  A: 

Yes, that's possible, albeit not literally the <td>, but what's in it. The simple trick is, to make sure that the content extends to the borders of the cell (it won't include the borders itself though).

As already explained, this isn't semantically correct. An a element is an inline element and should not be used as block-level element. However, here's an example (but JavaScript plus a td:hover CSS style will be much neater) that works in most browsers:

<td>
  <a href="http://example.com"&gt;
    <div style="height:100%;width:100%">
      hello world
    </div>
  </a>
</td>

PS: it's actually neater to change a in a block-level element using CSS as explained in another solution in this thread. it won't work well in IE6 though, but that's no news ;)

Alternative (non-advised) solution

If your world is only Internet Explorer (rare, nowadays), you can violate the HTML standard and write this, it will work as expected, but will be highly frowned upon and be considered ill-advised (you haven't heard this from me). Any other browser than IE will not render the link, but will show the table correctly.

<table>
    <tr>
        <a href="http://example.com"&gt;&lt;td  width="200">hello world</td></a>
    </tr>
</table>
Abel